
Pain In The Ass
Wizard
- Feb 10, 2022
- 638
I wonder if I could experience, for example, being stabbed to death, but then reanimate and analyse what happened and how it felt, I suspect I'd probably be surprised that it wasn't as bad as I thought it would be, and I'd maybe be less afraid of it potentially happening in the future. Same with full-hang, drowning, or some form of successful OD.
If we got to fully experience it many times first, using different methods, all the way to stone-cold brain death, then be able to reanimate and discuss what happened with ourselves, maybe we'd be surprisingly much more OK with dying and death. Maybe it wouldn't be as bad as we thought it would.
(I know some people will say, 'Well, I full-hanged, then woke up in hospital, and now I'm more afraid' - Well, what I'm describing didn't happen to you then did it?! Cus you didn't die, and couldn't then process the successful death - if you're more afraid now, it's probably that you're more afraid now of going through all that shit again and still being alive!)
If we got to fully experience it many times first, using different methods, all the way to stone-cold brain death, then be able to reanimate and discuss what happened with ourselves, maybe we'd be surprisingly much more OK with dying and death. Maybe it wouldn't be as bad as we thought it would.
(I know some people will say, 'Well, I full-hanged, then woke up in hospital, and now I'm more afraid' - Well, what I'm describing didn't happen to you then did it?! Cus you didn't die, and couldn't then process the successful death - if you're more afraid now, it's probably that you're more afraid now of going through all that shit again and still being alive!)
Last edited: